Title: Town of Rhine: Community Drinking Water Program
1Town of Rhine Community Drinking Water Program
CENTER FOR WATERSHED SCIENCE AND EDUCATION ?
UW-STEVENS POINT ? UW-EXTENSION
2Todays presentation
- Introduction to Groundwater
- What do my individual test results mean?
- General groundwater quality in the Town of Rhine
- Improving your water quality
3The Water Cycle
Precipitation
Transpiration
Infiltration
Runoff
Evaporation
Percolation
Well
Water Table
Runoff
Groundwater
River
4Groundwater Movement
5Groundwater Movement
6Private vs. Public Water Supplies
- Public Water Supplies
- Regularly tested and regulated by drinking
water standards. - Private Wells
- Not required to be regularly tested.
- Not required to take corrective action
- Owners must take special precautions to ensure
safe drinking water.
7Why do people test their water?
- Installed a new well
- Change in taste or odor
- Buying or selling their home
- Plumbing issues
- Want to know if its safe to drink.
8What are the Health Concerns?
- Acute Effects Usually seen within a short time
after exposure to a substance. - (ex. Bacteria or viral contamination which
may cause intestinal disease) - Chronic Effects Results from exposure to a
substance over a long period of time. - (ex. Arsenic or pesticides can increase the
chance of developing certain types of cancer)
9Understanding Risk?
Drinking water quality is only one part of an
individuals total risk.
1http//www.epa.gov/radon/healthrisks.html
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11The role of casing..
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13No one test tells us everything we need
to know about the safety and condition of a water
supply
14Interpreting Drinking Water Test Results
Tests important to health
Tests for aesthetic (taste,color,odor) problems
Other important indicator tests
- Bacteria
- Sodium
- Nitrate
- Copper
- Lead
- Triazine
- Zinc
- Sulfate
- Arsenic
- Saturation Index
- Alkalinity
- Conductivity
- Potassium
- Hardness
- Iron
- Manganese
- Chloride
Red human-influenced, Blue naturally found
15milligrams per liter (mg/l) parts per million
(ppm) 1 mg/l 1000 parts per billion (ppb)
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18Coliform bacteria
- Indicator of unsanitary conditions within the
water supply. - Possible pathway for harmful pathogens to enter
the well. - If any is present assume that the water is unsafe
- Sources
- Live in soils and on vegetation
- Human and animal waste
- Sampling error
Present Unsafe
Absent Safe
19E.coli bacteria
- Confirmation that bacteria originated from a
human or animal fecal source. - E.coli are often present with harmful bacteria,
viruses and parasites that can cause serious
gastrointestinal illnesses. - Any detectable level of E.coli means your water
is unsafe to drink.
20What should I do if I have Bacteria Problems?
- Use alternative source of water for drinking
- Retest
- 3. Try to identify any sanitary defects
- Loose or non-existent well cap
- Well construction faults
- Abandoned well
- Inadequate filtration by soil
- 4. Disinfect the well
- 5. Retest to ensure well is bacteria free.
- For reoccurring bacteria problems it may be
necessary to look into drilling a new well.
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23Tests for Aesthetic Problems
Hardness
- Natural (rocks and soils)
- Primarily calcium and magnesium
- Problems scaling, scum, use more detergent,
decrease water heater efficiency
HARD
200
IDEAL?
150
SOFT
0
24Water Softening
- Water softeners remove calcium and magnesium
which cause scaling and exchange it for sodium
(or potassium). - Negative Increases sodium content of water.
- Suggestions
- Bypass your drinking water faucet.
- Do not soften water for outdoor faucets.
- If you are concerned about sodium levels use
potassium chloride softener salt.
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26Tests for Overall Water Quality
- Alkalinity ability to neutralize acid
- Conductivity
- Measure of total ions
- can be used to indicate presence of contaminants
( twice the hardness) - pH Indicates waters acidity and helps
determine if water will corrode plumbing
27Tests for Overall Water Quality
28Land Use and Water Quality
Well pumping water
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30Soil
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32Nitrate Nitrogen
Test Important to Health
- Greater than 10 mg/L Exceeds State and Federal
Limits for Drinking Water - Between 2 and 10 mg/L Some Human Impact
- Less than 2.0 mg/L Transitional
- Less than 0.2 mg/L Natural
10
UNSAFE
2
0
NATURAL
33Nitrate-Nitrogen
- Health Effects
- Methemoglobinemia (blue baby disease)
- Possible links to birth defects and miscarriages
(humans and livestock) - Indicator of other contaminants
- Sources
- Agricultural fertilizer
- Lawn fertilizer
- Septic systems
- Animal wastes
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35Nitrogen
Outputs
Inputs
Volatilization
Atmospheric N
Denitrification
Manure
Nitrogen Crop Removal
Nitrogen Fertilizer
Nitrogen Leaching
Because plants are not 100 efficient at using
the nitrogen that is applied to fields, the more
N we apply the more that ends up in the
groundwater.
36Fertilizer Response Curve
Yield Optimum
100
- Economic Optimum
- variable from year to year depending on energy
costs, fertilizer costs, price of commodities
Increasing
Yield or Biomass Accumulation (kg/ha)
- Environmental Optimum
- depends on climate, soils, geology, etc.
- also depends on who you are
0
Increasing
Fertilizer Added (kg/ha)
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38What can I do to reduce my nitrate levels?
- Solution
- Eliminate contamination source or reduce nitrogen
inputs - Short term
- Change well depth or relocate well
- Carry or buy water
- Water treatment devices
- Reverse osmosis
- Distillation
- Anion exchange
39Tests for Aesthetic Problems
Chloride
250 mg/l
- Greater than 250 mg/l
- - No direct effects on health
- - Salty taste
- - Exceeds recommended level
- Greater than 10 mg/l may indicate human impact
- Less than 10 mg/l
- Natural in much of WI
10 mg/l
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41Test Important to Health
Lead
Unsafe
- Sources Lead solder joining copper pipes
(pre-1985) - Standard 0.015 mg/L (15 ppb)
- Health Effects
- Young children, infants and unborn children are
particularly vulnerable. - Lead may damage the brain, kidneys, nervous
system, red blood cells, reproductive system.
0.015
0
42Pesticides in Drinking Water
- Insecticides, herbicides, fungicides and other
substances used to control pests. - Health standards usually only account for parent
compound. - Parent compounds breakdown over time.
- May be additional effects from combination of
chemicals to consider. - Most frequently detected pesticides in WI
- Alachlor and its chemical breakdown products
- Metolachlor and its chemical breakdown products
- Atrazine and its chemical breakdown products
- Metribuzin
- Cyanazine and its chemical breakdown products.
- WI public health groundwater standard for
breakdown component Alachlor ESA. - WI public health groundwater standard is for
the total chlorinated atrazine residue
43A word about water treatment
- Test water at a certified lab
- Know the types and amounts of contaminants you
need to remove - Choose a device approved
- by the Wisconsin Department
- of Commerce for the problems
- found in your water
- Maintenance and testing
- necessary to ensure proper
- treatment.
For more information read Improving Your Private
Well Water Quality.
44Next Steps
- Test well annually for bacteria, or if water
changes color or clarity. - If levels are elevated, test again in 15 months
for nitrate.
45Next Steps
- Test for known or potential contaminants in your
neighborhood - Gasoline?
- Pesticides?
- Solvents?
Check for known contamination sites in Sheboygan
County at http//dnr.wi.gov/org/aw/rr/gis/index.h
tm
46- Thanks to the following for helping sponsor this
program - Town of Rhine
- Sheboygan County Land and Water Conservation
Department - UW-Extension Sheboygan County
- Center for Watershed Science and Education
- Questions?
Through the University of Wisconsin-Extension,
all Wisconsin people can access University
resources and engage in lifelong learning,
wherever they live and work.